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Ontem — 8 de Maio de 2026Stream principal

Sri Lanka makes 37 arrests as it raids another scam centre

8 de Maio de 2026, 06:30
You don't need to live near a scam compound for it to wreck your life. Americans lost $5.8 billion to crypto investment scams last year alone - and a raid in Sri Lanka this month shows exactly how the operations behind them keep finding new places to hide. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
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Teenager alleged to be Scattered Spider hacker arrested in Finland, faces US extradition

4 de Maio de 2026, 08:42
Here's a tip for you all. Unless you want to draw attention to yourself as a cybercriminal, don't flaunt your diamond-encrusted "HACK THE PLANET" necklace on Snapchat, or pose as a Sopranos crime boss while the FBI is reportedly closing in. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

Alleged Silk Typhoon hacker extradited to the United States to face charges

29 de Abril de 2026, 09:14
A man accused of working as a hacker for China's Ministry of State Security has been extradited to the USA from Italy, and faces - if found guilty - the prospect of decades behind bars. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

French police arrest 21-year-old “HexDex” hacker over 100 alleged data breaches

28 de Abril de 2026, 05:43
A 21-year-old man suspected of conducting approximately 100 data breaches since late 2025 - including a hack of the French Ministry of National Education that exposed records on almost a quarter of a million employees - has been arrested at his home in western France. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

AI and cryptocurrency scams are costing Americans billions, FBI reports

10 de Abril de 2026, 12:36
The fraud landscape has been changed by AI and cryptocurrency in a way that should concern organisations and individuals alike. Read more in my article on the Fortra blog.
  • ✇Graham Cluley
  • Smashing Security podcast #462: LinkedIn is spying on you, and you agreed to nothing Graham Cluley
    LinkedIn has been secretly scanning your browser for over 6,000 installed extensions — on every single click you make. It can tell if you're job hunting, what religion you are, and whether you have ADHD. And none of this is mentioned anywhere in their privacy policy. Meanwhile, California's crypto millionaires are learning that no amount of encryption can protect you from someone who knocks on your door pretending to deliver a pizza. All this and more in episode 462 of the “Smashing Securi
     

Smashing Security podcast #462: LinkedIn is spying on you, and you agreed to nothing

8 de Abril de 2026, 20:27
LinkedIn has been secretly scanning your browser for over 6,000 installed extensions — on every single click you make. It can tell if you're job hunting, what religion you are, and whether you have ADHD. And none of this is mentioned anywhere in their privacy policy. Meanwhile, California's crypto millionaires are learning that no amount of encryption can protect you from someone who knocks on your door pretending to deliver a pizza. All this and more in episode 462 of the “Smashing Security” podcast with cybersecurity expert and keynote speaker Graham Cluley, joined this week by special guest Dave Bittner.

Life imprisonment for Cambodian scam compound operators – but will it make a difference?

7 de Abril de 2026, 05:57
Cambodia has taken a dramatic step in its fight against scam compounds that have imprisoned innocent people, and forced them to work as virtual slaves defrauding victims via the internet around the world with romance scams and dodgy investment schemes. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

Nigerian romance scammer jailed after being caught out by fellow fraudster

3 de Abril de 2026, 06:38
A Nigerian fraudster spent years posing as a woman online, romancing unsuspecting American men out of their savings - until he accidentally tried the same trick on a fellow scammer, who told him to "learn how to do a clean job." The recovered chat logs helped put him behind bars for 15 years. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
  • ✇Graham Cluley
  • Smashing Security podcast #461: This man hid $400 million in a fishing rod. Then it vanished Graham Cluley
    A cannabis-growing, beekeeping, gyrocopter-flying Irishman invested his drug money in Bitcoin back in 2011 - and now sits on a fortune worth $400 million. There's just one small problem: the access codes were tucked inside his fishing rod case, which has mysteriously vanished. Or has it? Because this week, one of his frozen wallets suddenly woke up and moved $35 million - and someone had to identify themselves to do it. Meanwhile, Ajax Football Club scores a spectacular cyber own-goal, as a d
     

Smashing Security podcast #461: This man hid $400 million in a fishing rod. Then it vanished

1 de Abril de 2026, 20:26
A cannabis-growing, beekeeping, gyrocopter-flying Irishman invested his drug money in Bitcoin back in 2011 - and now sits on a fortune worth $400 million. There's just one small problem: the access codes were tucked inside his fishing rod case, which has mysteriously vanished. Or has it? Because this week, one of his frozen wallets suddenly woke up and moved $35 million - and someone had to identify themselves to do it. Meanwhile, Ajax Football Club scores a spectacular cyber own-goal, as a data breach that the club claimed affected "a few hundred" fans turns out to may have exposed the personal details of 300,000 supporters - along with the ability to steal match tickets and quietly remove people from the stadium ban list. All this and more in episode 461 of the "Smashing Security" podcast with cybersecurity expert and keynote speaker Graham Cluley, joined this week by special guest Danny Palmer.

Alleged RedLine malware developer extradited to United States

1 de Abril de 2026, 06:00
A man has appeared in federal court in Austin, Texas, after being extradited to the United States to face charges related to his alleged role as a key developer of the notorious RedLine malware. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

Smashing Security podcast #460: Never knock on the door of a nuclear submarine base and ask for a selfie

26 de Março de 2026, 08:27
A disgruntled data analyst decides that the best response to losing his contract is to steal the entire company payroll database and demand $2.5 million in Bitcoin - signing his extortion emails from a company called "Loot." Meanwhile, two people drive up to the entrance of the UK's nuclear submarine base at Faslane and politely ask if they can have a look around. Tourists? Spies? Something in between? All this and more in episode 460 of the "Smashing Security" podcast with cybersecurity veteran and keynote speaker Graham Cluley, and special guest Jenny Radcliffe.

How one man used 10,000 bots to steal $8,000,000 from music artists

25 de Março de 2026, 07:22
A man has pleaded guilty to defrauding online music streaming platforms out of more than US $8 million, after creating hundreds of thousands of songs with AI, and then using bots to play them billions of times. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

Fraudsters are using public planning records to target permit applicants

12 de Março de 2026, 15:31
If you're in the middle of applying for a planning or zoning permit, there is some unwelcome news: cyber-criminals have found a way to exploit the bureaucratic tedium of the process against you. Read more in my article on the Fortra blog.
  • ✇Graham Cluley
  • Smashing Security podcast #458: How not to steal $46 million from the US government Graham Cluley
    A Wikipedia security engineer accidentally wakes a dormant JavaScript worm that hadn't stirred since 2024 - and within minutes, giant woodpecker images are plastered across the internet's favourite encyclopaedia. Meanwhile, a crypto contractor hired to help the US Marshals manage seized digital assets allegedly decides to help himself to $46 million of it - and then brags about it on a recorded Telegram call. Plus: Graham champions Asterix, Trisha discovers the fantasy novels of Robin Hobb
     

Smashing Security podcast #458: How not to steal $46 million from the US government

11 de Março de 2026, 21:30
A Wikipedia security engineer accidentally wakes a dormant JavaScript worm that hadn't stirred since 2024 - and within minutes, giant woodpecker images are plastered across the internet's favourite encyclopaedia. Meanwhile, a crypto contractor hired to help the US Marshals manage seized digital assets allegedly decides to help himself to $46 million of it - and then brags about it on a recorded Telegram call. Plus: Graham champions Asterix, Trisha discovers the fantasy novels of Robin Hobb, and someone called "Lick" ends up in the nick. All this, and much more, in episode 458 of the "Smashing Security" podcast with cybersecurity veteran and keynote speaker Graham Cluley, and special guest Tricia Howard.

Twitter suspended 800 million accounts last year – so why does manipulation remain so rampant?

10 de Março de 2026, 12:54
Elon Musk's social media site says it suspended 800 million accounts in a year for spam and manipulation - but with state-backed campaigns still flooding the platform, the real question is how many fake accounts remain. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

How hackers bypassed MFA with a $120 phishing kit – until a global takedown shut it down

6 de Março de 2026, 14:58
In a co-ordinated public-private operation between law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity industry partners, Tycoon 2FA - one of the world's most prolific phishing-as-a-service platforms - has been dismantled. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
  • ✇Graham Cluley
  • Smashing Security podcast #457: How a cybersecurity boss framed his own employee Graham Cluley
    When a top cybersecurity firm discovered it had a leak, you would expect the FBI to be called. Instead, the person put in charge of the investigation was the actual leaker... who promptly sent an innocent colleague into a career-ending ambush. In this episode, we unravel the jaw-dropping tale of a defence contractor caught selling zero-day exploits to a Russia-linked broker. Plus: are nation states quietly poisoning AI models to bend reality itself? We explore how “foreign information mani
     

Smashing Security podcast #457: How a cybersecurity boss framed his own employee

4 de Março de 2026, 21:33
When a top cybersecurity firm discovered it had a leak, you would expect the FBI to be called. Instead, the person put in charge of the investigation was the actual leaker... who promptly sent an innocent colleague into a career-ending ambush. In this episode, we unravel the jaw-dropping tale of a defence contractor caught selling zero-day exploits to a Russia-linked broker. Plus: are nation states quietly poisoning AI models to bend reality itself? We explore how “foreign information manipulation interference” could target not just social media users, but the large language models we increasingly trust for answers — and what that might mean for truth, trust, and the future of online influence. All this, and much more, in episode 457 of the "Smashing Security" podcast with cybersecurity veteran and keynote speaker Graham Cluley, and special guest Carl Miller.

They seized $4.8m in crypto… then gave the master key to the internet

3 de Março de 2026, 13:09
South Korea's National Tax Service (NTS) has found itself in the middle of a deeply embarrassing - and costly - blunder after accidentally handing thieves the master key to a seized cryptocurrency wallet. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.

Notorious ransomware gang allegedly blackmailed by fake FSB officer

26 de Fevereiro de 2026, 10:40
There is a certain poetic justice in a cybersecurity-related story that has emerged from Moscow this week: A man has been accused of trying to extort money... from a notorious Russian ransomware gang. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
  • ✇Graham Cluley
  • Smashing Security podcast #456: How to lose friends and DDoS people Graham Cluley
    When the mysterious operator of an internet archiving-service decided to silence a curious Finnish blogger, they didn’t just send a stroppy email - they allegedly weaponised their own CAPTCHA page to launch a DDoS attack, threatened to invent an entirely new genre of AI porn, and tampered with parts of their own archive to smear the blogger's name. In this episode, we unravel how a website designed to preserve history may have trashed its own credibility - and how Wikipedia responded when tru
     

Smashing Security podcast #456: How to lose friends and DDoS people

25 de Fevereiro de 2026, 21:16
When the mysterious operator of an internet archiving-service decided to silence a curious Finnish blogger, they didn’t just send a stroppy email - they allegedly weaponised their own CAPTCHA page to launch a DDoS attack, threatened to invent an entirely new genre of AI porn, and tampered with parts of their own archive to smear the blogger's name. In this episode, we unravel how a website designed to preserve history may have trashed its own credibility - and how Wikipedia responded when trust went out the window. Plus a ransomware gang shoots itself in the foot with a classic case of buffoonery, accidentally corrupting the very keys victims would need to decrypt their data. When even the criminals can’t unlock your files, what happens next? All this, a surprisingly zen Pick of the Week, and a gloriously splenetic rant against web forms, on episode 456 of the award-winning "Smashing Security" podcast, with cybersecurity veteran and keynote speaker Graham Cluley and special guest Paul Ducklin.
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